16, .re 36—Friday, October 26, 1973 Dr. Tursinai, Philologist 86 , •r AM. •■ • ••••• How Caravan of U.S. and Israeli Leaders Covered 20 Communities for UJA, Led by Paul Zuckerman NEW YORK—Dr. Naphtali Herz Tursinai, a leading authority on Semitic lan- By IRVING FRIEDMAN guages who had been presi- NEW YORK—Paul Zucker- dent of the Hebrew Language man approached the micro- phone to speak to Jewish leaders in Los Angeles. The day before it was Miami and the day before that it was New York. All of the 150 men and wo- men who had crowded into the meeting room were the top leaders—and contributors —of the United Jewish Ap- peal campaign in Los Ange- les. "Brothers and sisters," Zuckerman began. "I use these words because only they can describe the warmth I have met here and the warmth all our Jews have given everywhere we have been." The UJA general chairman was a leading member of a team of Israeli and Ameri- DR. NAPHTALI TURSINAI can leaders who traveled to the major cities of the U. S., Photo Taken in 1950s meeting with prominent Academy and the first Bialik members of the Jewish com- Professor of Hebrew Philol- munity singly and in groups. ogy at Hebrew University, died Oct. 17 at age 86. Dr. Tursinai, upon viewing some broken pottery un- earthed in 1935 by the Well- come archeological expedi- tion, ascribed the Hebrew inscriptions thereon to the `.ime of Jeremiah. some 3,000 years ago. The discovery of the pottery, found at Tel ad-Duweir, the site of an- cient Lahish, a fortress in the southern area of the Kingdom of Judah, added ir- refutable testimony to the accuracy of the Bible in its account of the period of the Kings. Born in Lwow, Poland, Dr, Tursinai studied at the uni- versities of Vienna and Berlin, and he served as professor of Semitic lan- guages at both universities. He was expelled from Hit- ler's Germany and was one of the first group of Jewish professors to join the faculty of Hebrew University in 1933. He also served as dean of the faculty of humanities and chairman of the Institute of Jewish Studies. Martin Goldberg, Shoe Firm Manager Martin Goldberg, manager for 18 years of the A. F. Beck Shoe Corp. at North- land, died Tuesday at age 63. Mr. Goldberg, 24350 West- hampton, Oak Park, was a member of Cong. Bnai Moshe and the Radomer Mutual Society. Born in Radom, Poland, he survived the Holo- caust and came to this country in 1950. He worked for Beck's for 23 years. He leaves his wife, Ha- dasa; a son, Abraham; a daughter, Suzann e; two brothers, Norbert and Oscar; and a sister, Mrs. Sigmund (Kala) Katz of Kiryat Matz- kin, Israel. Justice Morris Eder NEW YORK—Morris Eder, retired justice of the New York Supreme Court, 1st District, and father of col- umnist Shirley Eder, died Oct. 20 at age 86. He wrote many opinions on real estate law that Were highly re- garded ill the legal. profes- sion. • Setting a pace that would exhaust anyone, Zuckerman spoke at nearly 20 major meetings in four days, and met individually with dozens of others in each city. Israeli members of the team were Pinhas Sapir, Is- rael's finance minister; Leon A. Dulzin, acting chairman of the Jewish Agency and Major General Haim Laskov. In addition to Zuckerman, the Americans included Ed- ward Ginsberg, chairman of the Joint Distribution Com- mittee and UJA president; Irving Bernstein, UJA execu- tive vice-chairman; and UJA National Chairman Albert Adelman, Alexander Grass, Louis Goldman and Leonard Strelitz. In his addresses, Sapir us- ually told how "I first went rabbi announced that he had no investments or savings, but would pledge one-third his salary. After a meeting in Miami wfiere 100 people pledged ap- proximately $8,000,000, Zuc- kerman said in an emotion- choked voice, "I begin to un- derstand why we are called a Chosen People, because I have been privileged to be with you and to see what you are ready to do." On the plane back home, Zuckerman spent a half hour before taking a brief nap re- viewing plans with Sapir. The U. S. Secret Service men and the Israel security men who accompanied the group were sprawled out on the seats, trying to sleep a bit before the next day's hectic schedule began. In three and a half days, the caravan crossed the PAUL ZUCKERMAN With PINHAS SAPIR at Los Angeles Meeting A Keter Publishing House, Jerusalem, which last year published the monumental 16- volume Encyclopedia Ju- daica, announces the publica- tion of a year book for dis- tribution in the U.S. Dec. 1. Edited by Louis I. Rabino- witz, and with a foreward by the publisher, Yitzhak Ris- chin, the supplementary vol- ume covers the events of 1972. It updates existing material in Encyclopedia Judaica, with feature articles by distinguished Israeli and American contributors. Sidra Ezrahi contributes a study of "Holocaust Litera- ture." Prof. Menahem Stern writes of the "Zealots" and the revelations recently un- covered about their battle with the Roman empire and the fall of Masada. There is a study of "David Ben Gur- ion's Political Philosophy" by Avraham Avihai. Photo journalist Nachum Tim Gidal contributes in text and 50 pages of photographs a spe- cial feature, "Israel — 25 Years in Pictures." MY WORK IS GIFT OF GOD MADAME WHITE READER ADVISOR I am the Twelve Sister Born with Veil ONLY DONATIONS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY PHONE; 843-6453 United States, met in four cities, spoke to representa- tives of 230 communities at almost 20 major meetings. They strengthened the re- solve of American Jewry with their strength, shared their warmth with all they met and moved their fellow Jews with their understand- ing and resolve. Two Protest 1973 Nobel Award OSLO — Two members of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Committee have re- signed because they said they felt that awarding the prize to U. S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese Politburo member Le Duc Tho was a serious mistake. Protesting against the award was Helge Rognliden, chairman of the Liberal Party, and Helge Hovdhagen, a former Center Party rep- resentative. The protest marked the first time any member of the Nobel committee so open- ly disagreed with the selec- tion. The five-member com- mittee is elected by the Storting (parliament) for six- year terms. Meanwhile, a t Harvard to the people of Israel asking University in Boston, among them to meet their share of 12 professors who allowed the financial costs of the war. themselves to be interviewed Only when they had under- taken to do this did I feel free to come to the American Jews and other world Jewish communities and to ask them to help more than ever before WASHINGTON — Wilbur with our humanitarian Mills (D., Ark.), chairman of needs." Again and again, young the House Ways and Means men with their wives sitting Committee proposed Satur- along side them, stood to say, day "a high-level conference "I can't match the big between the principal oil- amounts just discussed, but using powers and the power somehow I will borrow the behind the Arab aggression money from a bank. I pledge . . as long as the Russian airlift is tolerated." $10,000 . . . $20,000 . . . take a mortgage on my house In the proposal Rep. Mills and give whatever it comes said, "I suggest that the to . . ." President call Premier Ta- In New York, a prominent naka, Chancellor Brand t, President Pompidou and Prime Minister Heath to join Mildred Direnfeld, him in inviting Chairman Brezhnev to one (confer- Bnai Brith Leader Mildred L. Direnfeld, a ence). Washington is the founder and past president place for it. "It would be appropriate of Harry B. Keidan Chapter of Bnai Brith, died Oct. 20 to include President Tito of Yugoslavia, Prime Minister at age 64. Born in Cleveland, Mrs. Gandhi of India and Presi- Direnfeld, 25071 Rue Ver- dent Houphouet-Boigny of the sailles E., Oak Park, was a Ivory Coast. in order that fund raiser for District 6 of less favorably situated na- Bnai Brith. She was a mem- tions may be represented ber of Cong. Bnai Moshe too." He said the issue of ex- Sisterhood, Hadassah and Women's American ORT; tending most-favored-nation and co-chairman of the Bnai treatment to Russia was Brith Youth Services Appeal. "out of order pending sus- She leaves her husband, pension of her arms airlift, Morris; a son, James; a and that the issue could be sister; Mrs. Isadore (Moline) continued once the confer- Sorkin of Jacksonville, Fla.; ence "had done its urgent peace-guaranteeing job." and three grandchildren. Mills Proposes Oil Conference on the Nobel committee's de- cision, six felt that Dr. Kis- singer should not have won the award at all. "Mr. Kissinger is a very appropriate choice for the Nobel Prize in terms of his general effort to find a great- er balance in world politics," said Prof. Edwin 0. Reischa- uer, former ambassador to Japan. "But to put him to- gether with Le Due Tho shows either that the people of Norway have a very poor understanding of what hap- pened out there or a good sense of humor." Supporters included econo- mist John Kenneth Galbraith who said, "I think the Nobel committee showed a good amount of imagination in coupling his award with Le Duc Tho." 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